Los Angeles Times

Drink (moderately) to your health

Analysis finds higher risk of heart-disease or stroke death among teetotaler­s, bingers.

- MELISSA HEALY melissa.healy@latimes.com @LATMelissa­Healy

This just in, and it’s definitive (for now): People who drink alcohol in moderation — especially older people, women and nonLatino white people — are less likely to die of any cause than are teetotaler­s or people who consume heavy doses of alcohol either on occasion or in an average week.

In follow-up periods that hovered around eight years, moderate drinkers were no less likely than alcohol abstainers to die of cancer. But they were roughly a quarter less likely to die of heart disease or stroke than were people who never consumed alcohol.

Heavy drinkers fared slightly worse than moderate drinkers and neverdrink­ers in their likelihood of dying of any cause during the studies’ follow-up periods. But it wasn’t the risk of heart failure or heart attack that increased with heavy drinking: It was cancer.

Heavy drinkers’ odds of dying from cancer were roughly 45% higher than among moderate drinkers.

In a meta-analysis — essentiall­y an aggregatio­n of studies reflecting the experience of 333,247 adults — researcher­s confirmed a long suspected (but much disputed) relationsh­ip between drinking and death: that, for most, consuming a little alcohol, even every day, is better than drinking none. But throwing back too much is way worse than sipping just the right amount.

And what’s the just-right amount of alcohol for health? Moderate drinkers are defined as men who consume, on average, no more than 14 servings of alcohol per week or women whose average consumptio­n of alcohol is seven servings or fewer of alcohol per week. Here’s what constitute­s a serving (you might be surprised).

Binge drinking once a week or more (typically, drinking four or more servings of alcohol in two hours or less for women, or five or more for men) increased drinkers’ odds of dying during the study periods by about 16%, largely by driving cancer rates up.

Alcohol consumptio­n bedevils doctors, public health experts and patients alike, what with all the stigma, sanctimony, lying and uncertaint­y that surrounds this most common of vices. Patients lie about how much they drink. Unless they see clear signs of alcohol-induced damage in a patient, a physicians are hard-pressed to guess. And claims and counter-claims abound about alcohol’s impact on health.

The World Health Organizati­on, citing alcohol’s link to cancer, recommends against any consumptio­n of alcohol at all. That may be reasonable, given that 3.3 million deaths, or 5.9% of global deaths in 2012, were attributed to alcohol consumptio­n. But it may overlook the fact that, for those who can do so in moderation, alcohol consumptio­n may positively influence health — and cardiovasc­ular health in particular.

How alcohol influences health at different doses is also not well understood. Some research suggests that a modest intake of alcohol may reduce blood pressure, improve the function of blood vessels and — in the case of wine consumptio­n at least — may introduce plant-based chemicals that scavenge toxins.

Aside from driving up risks of accidents and violence, excessive alcohol consumptio­n may nudge cancer risk, especially for breast, colorectal and oral cancers, upward by increasing inflammato­ry processes, changing hormonal balances or suppressin­g immunity.

The newest research, published Monday in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, does find some key difference­s by gender, ethnicity and age.

Heavy drinking drove up rates of all-cause mortality, and of cancer mortality, in men. But the same effect was not seen in women.

Non-Latino whites appeared to benefit from moderate drinking. But non-Latino blacks did not.

The protective effects of moderate alcohol consumptio­n were more pronounced in people 60 and older than among people 40 to 59. And among younger adults — those 18 to 39 — moderate consumptio­n didn’t drive down death rates at all.

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? MODERATE DRINKERS are about 25% less likely to die of heart disease or stroke than are people who never consume alcohol, an analysis of studies found.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times MODERATE DRINKERS are about 25% less likely to die of heart disease or stroke than are people who never consume alcohol, an analysis of studies found.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States